Hotel Owners Watch FCC Mandatory Access Proposals
October 1, 1999
Eric Fishman - New York
This summer the Federal Communication Commission (FCC or Commission) launched
an ambitious yet controversial rulemaking proceeding to foster the development
of competitive telecommunications networks on the local level. At the core of
the Commission's initiative are a series of proposals to require owners of
multiple tenant environments to provide reasonable and nondiscriminatory access
to rights-of-way, buildings, rooftops and other facilities on their premises. Is
this yet another governmental burden on hotels?
The Commission invited multitenant property owners, telecommunications
service providers, state and local governments and the general public to comment
on these proposals. Although the FCC is no longer soliciting comments from the
public in this proceeding, property owners and telecommunications service
providers alike should be familiar with and monitor this FCC proceeding
carefully.
The FCC's rulemaking marks another step in the agency's ongoing efforts to
foster competition in local telecommunications markets by removing barriers to
market entry. What distinguishes it from previous initiatives, however, are the
burdens it would impose on nontelecommunications providers, and the emphasis it
places on facilities-based competition.
Do the Proposed Rules Apply to Hotel Owners?
On their face, the FCC's proposed rules would be generally applicable to
"multiple tenant environments," which the Commission defines as
including, for example, apartment buildings (rental, condominium or co-op),
office buildings, office parks, shopping centers, and manufactured housing
communities. Unfortunately, the Commission did not otherwise define the term
"multiple tenant environments," and it is unclear whether the term is
meant to encompass multi-resident structures such as hotels and college
dormitories. Since the primary goals of the proposed rules are to foster local
service competition and subscriber choice, a broad interpretation of the term
may be unfair to owners of such buildings, whose residents are not long-term
tenants and do not generally subscribe to telephone or other telecommunications
services at these locations. Such an exception, however, may not completely
protect hotel owners which lease space to shopkeepers and other tenants whom the
FCC's proposed rules are designed to benefit. Accordingly, hotel owners should
keep apprised of the developments in this rulemaking proceeding.
Background
A major goal of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996 Act) was to ensure
the availability of competitive local telecommunications services, including
advanced and innovative services "to all Americans."
Nearly four years since passage of the Act, however, the Commission has been
frustrated by what it perceives as the slow progress of meaningful competition
on the local level, particularly among facilities-based carriers. The Commission
has, therefore, centered its current rulemaking on the elimination of what it
views as artificial barriers to facilities-based competition.
In the FCC's view, access by competing telecommunications service providers
to customers in multiple tenant environments is critical to the successful
development of competition in local telecommunications markets.
FCC Focuses on Property Owners
While previous FCC initiatives to implement the 1996 Act have imposed
regulatory burdens on the incumbent local exchange carriers (ILEC), the current
rulemaking focuses on multitenant property owners - a group until now virtually
unregulated by the Commission. This new approach responds to complaints by
competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) who have argued that many building
owners and ILECs have obstructed competing telecommunications carriers from
obtaining access on reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms to necessary
facilities located within multiple unit premises.
Specifically, the FCC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) seeks comment on
the following issues:
- Section 224 Access. Pursuant to Section 224 of the Communications Act,
utilities, including local exchange carriers (LECs), must provide cable
television systems and telecommunications carriers with nondiscriminatory access
to any pole, duct, conduit or right-of-way that they "own or control."
The Commission proposes to require utilities to permit access by competitive
carriers to "rooftops and similar rights-of-way, and riser conduit that
they 'own or control' in multiple tenant environments."
The Commission has tentatively concluded that cable television system and
telecommunications service providers should have nondiscriminatory access to all
rights-of-way that a utility owns or controls and uses for wire communications,
whether publicly or privately granted, under just and reasonable rates, terms
and conditions. The agency has tentatively given the term
"right-of-way" a broad definition to include not only riser conduit in
a building, but also rooftop space to place a transmit or receive antenna.
- Unbundled Network Elements. An ILEC must make available to any requesting
carrier nondiscriminatory access to network elements on an unbundled basis at
any technically feasible point under just, reasonable and nondiscriminatory
rates, terms and conditions. In a previous rulemaking, the Commission already
required ILECs to make available unbundled access to the network interface
device (NID) in multitenant buildings, finding that a competitor that deploys
its own loops must have access to this facility in order to provide service and
that such access is technically feasible. In its new rulemaking, the FCC sought
comment on whether ILECs should also make available to any requesting
telecommunications carrier unbundled access to riser cable and wiring that they
control within multiple tenant environments.
- Nondiscriminatory Access to Facilities Controlled by Premises Owners. The
NPRM additionally sought comments on whether the FCC should require building
owners, who allow access to their premises to any telecommunications provider,
to make comparable access available to all such providers on a nondiscriminatory
basis. The Commission is considering the necessity of, and prospects for,
adopting a national, nondiscriminatory access requirement for all multitenant
environments, in order to permit consumers to use the service provider of their
choice.
The FCC explicitly recognized that there may be practical limitations to
implementing a nondiscriminatory access policy. For example, physical
limitations on a building's size or space availability could, practically
speaking, render impossible the installation of equipment from multiple vendors.
Further, it may be economically infeasible for a provider to install facilities
to service some locations without an exclusive service agreement to allow
recovery of its investment. Moreover, such a mandatory access requirement may be
considered a per se taking of private property by the government, in violation
of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The Commission is considering extending its rules concerning antenna
installation to other forms of telecommunications. In 1997, the Commission
adopted rules prohibiting, with limited exceptions, any public or private
restrictions that would impair the installation, maintenance or use of certain
antennas designed to receive video programming services on property within the
exclusive use or control of the antenna user, where the user has a direct or
indirect ownership or leasehold interest in the property. The Commission sought
comments on whether it should adopt similar rules pertaining to
telecommunications services, services delivered via telecommunications, and
other fixed wireless services.
Next Step
Given the nature of the issues dealt with in the Commission's NPRM, it is
unlikely that final regulatory action will be taken anytime soon. Moreover,
court challenges are likely if and when the Commission does attempt to implement
many of the proposals. Nevertheless, both commercial property owners, including
hotel owners, and telecommunications carriers should at least keep abreast of
the course of this proceeding. They can do so directly through the Commission's
Web site, www.fcc.gov, or through their counsel or industry association. We will
be glad to furnish additional information or answer any questions.
________
Mr. Fishman, Mr. Peterson and Mr. O'Connor practice in the Washington, D.C.,
office.
Mr. Fishman can be reached at 202-828-1849 and at efishman@hklaw.com, Mr.
Peterson can be reached at 202-457-5941 and at fpeterso@hklaw.com and Mr.
O'Connor can be reached at 202-828-1889 and at doconnor@hklaw.com